K-Tec

Twinkling stars?

  • Tonybwf
  • Topic Author
  • Offline
  • Main Sequence
  • Main Sequence
More
16 years 2 months ago #61508 by Tonybwf
Twinkling stars? was created by Tonybwf
Hi all,

ya know when a star twinkles is that an actual explosion or chemical reaction? An if it is isit as light years would have it the star exploding a long time ago an its only now we see it??

Regards
Tony

"What we do in life echoes in eternity"

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

More
16 years 2 months ago #61513 by jeyjey
Replied by jeyjey on topic Re: Twinkling stars?
Stars don't actually twinkle -- only our atmosphere makes it look that way. Within the atmosphere between you and the star there are pockets of air at slightly different temperatures. These cause the light from the star to deflect slightly as it crosses the boundaries between different-temperature pockets. As the air moves about, the pockets you're viewing through change and the star appears to twinkle.

This effect (the air pockets) is also what is referred to astronomically as the "seeing". Good seeing means either the air is very uniform in temperature, or the pockets are very large. In either case, they don't smear the image in the telescope as much (or make it jump around in smaller scopes).

Cheers,
-- Jeff.

Nikon 18x70s / UA Millennium                              Colorado:
Solarscope SF70 / TV Pronto / AP400QMD             Coronado SolarMax40 DS / Bogen 055+3130
APM MC1610 / Tak FC-125 / AP1200GTO               Tak Mewlon 250 / AP600EGTO

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

More
16 years 2 months ago #61514 by mjs
Replied by mjs on topic Re: Twinkling stars?
I think that the twinkling we see here is purely a result of the turbulence and differing temperatures in the atmosphere. If you look at a slightly twinkling star through binoculars it no longer is seen to twinkle. Stars closer to the horizon twinkle more because you are looking through more of our atmosphere.
I find amount of "twinkle" to be a good indicator of how poor the seeing will be on that particular night.

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

  • Tonybwf
  • Topic Author
  • Offline
  • Main Sequence
  • Main Sequence
More
16 years 2 months ago #61516 by Tonybwf
Replied by Tonybwf on topic Re: Twinkling stars?
Would atmospheric pressure then have an effect such as QFE? also would it be a good judge so if stars where not twinkling that it would mean good observing conditions

QFE:pressure at sea level

Regards
Tony

"What we do in life echoes in eternity"

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

More
16 years 2 months ago #61518 by jeyjey
Replied by jeyjey on topic Re: Twinkling stars?
I'm much less clear on this one, but as I understand it a twinkling star is a good indicator of poor seeing conditions, but a non-twinkling star is not necessarily an indication of good seeing conditions.

I've never heard and explaination of why though....

-- Jeff.

Nikon 18x70s / UA Millennium                              Colorado:
Solarscope SF70 / TV Pronto / AP400QMD             Coronado SolarMax40 DS / Bogen 055+3130
APM MC1610 / Tak FC-125 / AP1200GTO               Tak Mewlon 250 / AP600EGTO

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

  • Tonybwf
  • Topic Author
  • Offline
  • Main Sequence
  • Main Sequence
More
16 years 2 months ago #61519 by Tonybwf
Replied by Tonybwf on topic Re: Twinkling stars?
Thanks jeff

Regards
Tony

"What we do in life echoes in eternity"

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

Time to create page: 0.105 seconds
Powered by Kunena Forum